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Starting a Med Spa

The Medical Director Agreement: What to Pay, What to Require, and What to Put in Writing

The medical director relationship is too important to leave to a handshake. The agreement defines responsibilities, compensation, and the supervision that has to actually happen.

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The medical director relationship is one of the load-bearing compliance elements of a med spa, and it's too important to rest on a handshake or a vague arrangement. The agreement is where the responsibilities, the required supervision, and the compensation get defined — and where you either establish a real relationship or paper over a nominal one. A vague medical director arrangement is a compliance gap with a friendly face.

This is general education for owners, not legal advice. Structure the agreement with healthcare counsel for your state.

A vague medical director arrangement is a compliance gap with a friendly face. Put the responsibilities, the supervision, and the compensation in writing — and make them real.

What the agreement defines

A medical director agreement should generally spell out the director's responsibilities and required involvement — oversight, protocols, the supervision your state requires — along with compensation and the expectations that make the supervision genuine rather than nominal. The agreement is the instrument that turns "we have a medical director" into a defined relationship with real duties, and it should be structured to satisfy your state's specific requirements. Leaving these undefined is exactly what a regulator, or a problem, exposes.

Pay for a real role

Compensation should reflect the genuine responsibilities and involvement the role requires. This is where the "rent-a-doc" trap forms: underpay for a role you then quietly expect to be nominal, and you've structured an arrangement that can't actually deliver the supervision it's supposed to. Pay and structure the role so the director can genuinely do the job — real oversight, real protocols, real involvement — because the nominal version is the one that fails when tested.

Make it real, not just written

A written agreement is necessary but not sufficient; the relationship it describes has to actually happen. The agreement defines the supervision, protocols, and involvement; the practice then has to ensure those occur in reality, not just on paper. A beautifully drafted agreement describing supervision that never happens is the same exposure as no agreement, dressed better. Put it in writing and make it real.

What to do

  • Put the medical director relationship in a clear written agreement defining responsibilities, required supervision, and compensation.
  • Pay and structure for a genuine role, avoiding the underpaid-and-nominal 'rent-a-doc' trap.
  • Structure it to satisfy your state's requirements with healthcare counsel.
  • Make the relationship real, not just documented — the supervision has to actually happen.

Frequently asked questions

What should a medical director agreement include?

Generally the medical director's responsibilities and required involvement (oversight, protocols, supervision), the compensation, and the expectations that make the supervision genuine rather than nominal — structured to satisfy your state's requirements. The agreement should reflect a real relationship, not a paper formality. This is general education, not legal advice.

How much should a medical director be paid?

Compensation should reflect the genuine responsibilities and involvement the role requires, structured appropriately for your state and situation. Underpaying for a role you then expect to be nominal is the 'rent-a-doc' trap; pay and structure it so the director can actually do the job.

Why put it in writing?

Because the medical director relationship carries real compliance weight, and a vague or handshake arrangement leaves the responsibilities, supervision, and expectations undefined — exactly what a regulator or a problem will expose. A clear written agreement defines a real relationship.

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